August 9th, 2009
Poems about rocks
I’ve read Robert Penn Warren’s Democracy and Poetry but until yesterday I had never read any of his poetry. When I opened his book Being Here: Poetry 1977-1980 the first poem to come to my attention was “Globe of Gneiss.” I love rocks. So this became the first poem of his I read.
Here it is:
How heavy is it? fifteen tons? Thirty? More?–
The great globe of gneiss, poised, it would seem, by
A hair’s weight, there on the granite ledge. Stop!
Don’t go near! Or only on tiptoe. Don’t,
For God’s sake, be the fool I once was, who
Went up and pushed. Pushed with all strength,
Expecting the great globe to go
Hurtling like God’s wrath to crush
Spruces and pines down the cliff, at least
Three hundred yards down to the black lake the last
Glacier to live in Vermont had left to await
Its monstrous plunge.
I pushed. It was like trying
To push a mountain. It
Had lived through so much, the incessant
Shove, like a shoulder, of north wind nightlong,
The ice-pry and lever beneath, the infinitesimal
Decay of ledge-edge. Suddenly,
I leaped back in terror.
Suppose!
So some days I now go again to see
Lichen creep slow up that
Round massiveness. It creeps
Like Time, and I sit and wonder how long
Since that gneiss, deep in earth,
In a mountain’s womb, under
Unspeakable pressure, in total
Darkness, in unmeasurable
Heat, had been converted
From simple granite, striped now with something
Like glass, harder
Than steel, and I wonder
How long ago, and how, the glacier had found it.
How long and how it had trundled
The great chunk to globe-shape.
Then poised it on ledge-edge, in balanced perfection.
Sun sets. It is a long way
Down, the way darkening. I
Think how long my afternoon
Had seemed. How long
Will the night be?
But how short that time for the great glove
To remember so much!
How much will I remember tonight?


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